When Dissent is Equated with Violence

UC Santa Barbara Professor Mireille Miller-Young is more imprudent, but no more ideologically insane than the administration of Stanford University. Miller Young forcibly took a sign from, and allegedly assaulted a pro-life protestor at her college. The Volokh Conspiracy cites the police report, in which Miller-Young argues that her actions were “in defense of her students and her own safety.”

The professor’s actions are indefensible outside various left-wing lunatic asylums, but her principle of equating peaceful dissent with violence is not some sort of personal eccentricity. Though it eventually backed down, Stanford University tried to force the Anscombe Society to pay for ten security guards at a conference on the grounds that some students claimed that they felt “threatened” by the mere presence of a group that believes that sex should only occur within marriage understood as the union of one man and one woman. You don’t have to agree with any of the Anscombe Society’s beliefs to recognize both the bad faith of Stanford University and the attempt to incrementally criminalize peaceful political dissent. Stanford’s position was that mere vocalized dissent constitutes an implied violent threat and that the favored political activists who are hostile to the dissenters must be “protected” by force from the presence of an ideologically unfashionable minority.

Miller-Young’s violence is of a piece with Standford’s initial response. The opposition’s ideas constitute oppression within society. The physical presence of the opposition constitutes an immediate physical danger. The people who only see peaceful protestors practicing their constitutional rights don’t have their minds right. There can be no “peaceful” opposition to the priorities of the Miller-Young’s of the world. From her ideological perspective (which was also the stated ideological perspective of the Stanford University administration), she was practicing a form of self-defense. Her imprudence was that she followed the logic of Stanford University’s position to its conclusion

Academic activists of this type are of course a small minority, but they have an outsized interest in politics. Some of these activists will get out of the playpen of university politics and the more sane and democratic center-left is going to have to find a way to deal with them. They are probably going to pick more and more self-destructive fights as time goes on. In the long-run, I don’t think that the Miller-Young’s of the world will do the political left any good, but it is possible that some partisans of left-wing intolerance will sneak onto the federal judiciary and entertain us with some creative theories of what free speech is and who does not have a right to it.

But for a while, the intolerant left is going to get more bold, because they are thinking and feeling like this kid.